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Discover Ludwig'more lasting' is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used in the context of comparing something to something else as being more lasting or longer-lasting. For example, "This new paint job will be more lasting than the old one."
Exact(60)
Its devastation is rather more lasting.
His building projects proved more lasting.
Journalism edges towards something more lasting.
There's something greater than the result, more lasting.
Now he is hoping for something more lasting.
I am sorry that my time with all of them was not more lasting.
Less obvious were the diastolic drawings-in: quieter, but pervasive and perhaps more lasting.
The raid here is an indication that these new incursions are becoming bigger and more lasting.
But the broader consequences, the impact outside the halls of power, may be more lasting.
This time, he may be onto something bigger, and more lasting.
But corporate zombies do more lasting damage.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com